Capitalism beared

Under capitalism if there is no profit, there is no
production even if people need things or services. Therefore, over the last 25
years there has been a massive expansion of the unproductive sectors of the capitalist
economy, i.e. a massive increase in fictitious capital. This is now expressing
itself in what may be the worst crisis for more than 30 years.

As I write, world stock markets are still reeling from yet
another shock to the system brought on by the so-called credit crunch that has
enveloped capitalist financial markets since last summer.

The latest shock was the biggest yet. Late on Sunday night,
16 March, the US Federal Reserve Bank announced that Bear Stearns, America's
fifth-largest investment bank, was bust. So it had agreed that JP Morgan-Chase,
an even bigger bank, would take over Bear Stearns. JP Morgan was to pay just $2
a share and it would not be paying cash, but just offering JP Morgan shares to
Bear Stearns shareholders. At the same time, the huge loans and bonds of $30bn
that Bear Stearns had on its books would be guaranteed by a loan from the
Federal Reserve to JP Morgan.

In effect, JP Morgan was getting Bear Stearns and its
business for virtually nothing. It was paying $256m (and not in cash) for a
bank that had buildings alone worth $2bn and whose shares were worth over $100
each just a few months ago! And the risky loans that Bear Stearns had, and
which had forced it to the wall, were going to be guaranteed by the Fed. What a
deal for JP Morgan!

The US
state authorities were doing this because they knew that Bear Stearns could not
meet its obligations to other banks and creditors. It had run out of cash and
nobody in Wall Street, New York's
financial centre, would lend to it. If it went bust, however, then all the
other banks in Wall Street and in Europe too
would incur huge losses on their loans and contracts to Bear Stearns and
perhaps force some of them into bankruptcy too.

The Fed had to act in bailing out the great capitalist financial
system. So it has taken on a considerable obligation to the rest of the banking
system on behalf of the taxpayer - that's us.

The Fed's action echoes what happened with Northern Rock in Britain. There
a medium-sized mortgage lender that had pretensions to become a bigger bank
went bust when it could not borrow enough money to pay interest or principal to
the banks and investors who had bought its mortgages.

In this case, the Bank of England refused an offer from
Lloyds Bank to buy Northern Rock for a pittance with guarantees on its loans,
like the Fed did with JP Morgan to buy Bear Stearns. Instead, it opted to try
and save the bank by providing taxpayer funds directly.

The Bank of England's plan did not work and it racked up
huge obligations - nearly $100bn compared to $30bn the Fed just provided.
Eventually, the government was forced to nationalise NR with the aim of sacking
most of the workforce and selling off much of the mortgages to get our money
back.

Whatever the solution opted for by the state monetary
authorities in the US or the
UK,
it shows that the credit crunch has reached such proportions that large banks
are now going to the wall. No wonder former Fed Chairman Greenspan called the
global financial crisis the worst since the 1930s. The financial sector of
capitalism is tottering.

How did it get into this sorry state? The key to
understanding the crisis is the changing relationship between the productive
and unproductive sectors of capitalism. Capitalism is a system of production of
things that people need for profit. Production is not for need, but for profit.
If there is no profit, there is no production even if people need things or
services.

By that definition, the productive sectors of capitalism are
those that generate profit. Marx explained that only labour can generate value
and profit arises when the value of goods or services sold on the market
exceeds the cost of employing labour and investing in plant and raw materials
to make goods or services.

But some sectors of capitalism may seem to make a profit,
but in reality are really just extracting or redistributing profits actually
generated in other sectors of the economy. Thus, real estate companies can make
a profit on buying and selling properties and on the fees they charge. But
nothing has been produced in that process. Profits are also made when private
builders build a house and sell it. But here something that people need is
produced. From the point of view of capitalism, the productive sector is house
building but the unproductive sector is real estate, because that is where the
profit that real estate agents make is originally generated.

For capitalism, the productive sectors that generate profit
are broadly manufacturing, mining, transport and communications. But these
sectors must buy the services of lawyers, estate agents, advertisers and above
all they must borrow from the banks and financial institutions to finance
investment and pay their employees. These sectors are necessary to lubricate
the wheels of capitalism, but they are unproductive because they do not
generate profits for the whole economy, but merely get a bite out of the
revenues produced by the productive sectors.

Just as ‘necessary' and unproductive for capitalism are the
government sectors of health, education, police and the armed forces. They are
necessary to preserve the health and skills of the workforce and keep ‘law and
order'. But they do not generate surplus value or make a profit in themselves.

What has happened over the last 25 years particularly has
been a massive expansion of the unproductive sectors of the capitalist economy
(at least in the mature advanced capitalist economies of North America, Western
Europe and Japan).
As capitalism has matured it has become increasingly less oriented to
production. The shrinking productive sectors have had to finance an
ever-growing unproductive sector or mature capitalist economies have had to
extract profits from the fast-rising productive sectors in China, India
and Latin America.

As a result, economic growth in the mature economies has
slowed to a trickle compared to the golden decades of the 1950s and 1960s.
Sure, economic growth has not been as convulsive and volatile as in the 1970s,
but it has averaged no more than 3% a year in the advanced economies compare to
5-6% in the post-1948 period.

That's because more and more investment has been diverted
into unproductive sectors that have given only the appearance of better
profitability. And worse, as profitability declined in productive sectors, the
monetary authorities tried to boost growth by lowering interest rates and
printing more money. Money capital grew, giving the appearance that there was
plenty of capital or profit to reinvest.

But as Marx would say, this was fictitious capital. It was
not real because it was not based on profits made in the productive sectors of
capitalism, but merely the result of the printing of paper money, or the making
of contracts for bonds, mortgages and other financial instruments. In the last
15 years, completely new and ever more exotic financial instruments were
created to finance the buying of stocks and shares, buildings and homes and
even some investment in real production.

This fictitious capital reached astronomical levels. The
world's annual output was worth about $53 trillion in 2007. However, bank loans
reached $40 trillion, the stock markets of the world reached $50trn, the bond
and mortgage markets reached $70trn and most astounding of all the derivative
markets (contracts to buy or sell bonds, stocks or loans by a certain date)
reached $500 trillion, or ten times world GDP!

Clearly, world capitalism had become unreal. This could not
last. The trigger was housing. This, after all, was one the biggest parts of
fictitious capital. Cheap mortgages and a huge influx of money enabled even
average earners to get onto the housing market from about 15 years ago.
Everywhere the housing market took off: rising prices bred even bigger
mortgages and even higher prices. The appearance of prosperity led homeowners
to borrow money on their houses and spend like there was no tomorrow.

And the banks not only provided ever more mortgages to
people who could not afford them; they also sold on those mortgages as bonds to
other banks and investors greedy for the higher interest and prices that they
earned.

Then about mid-2005 American house prices began to stop
rising so fast and even started to fall. Prices had got so high that more and
more people could not afford to buy, even with cheap and easy mortgages. The
productive sectors of the economy were just not generating enough wage
increases and profit rises to pay for high house prices. Just as the stock
market bubble had burst in 2000, leading to economic recession in 2001, now it
was the turn of the housing market bubble.

House prices in the US
have now slumped over 10%, with falls as big as 30% in key states like California and Florida.
People began to default on their mortgages. Banks that held them were forced to
write off these debts. But many of these mortgages had been packaged off as
bonds to others. Investors now found that their bonds were worthless. They had
borrowed on the value of these bonds and now could not pay back their creditors.
Soon the credit crunch was swinging right through the financial sectors of America, Europe and Asia.
Eventually we have come to Bear Stearns.

When banks have to pay losses with their shareholders'
money, they are forced to find more investors or they must cut back on lending.
That's because they cannot lend more than say ten times the value of their
investor's capital or the deposits they hold. Most of the time, investors and
depositors don't want their money all at once, so banks ‘leverage' up, assuming
that they only need to pay out on about 10% of their liabilities at any time.

So if their capital disappears as they pay off losses and if
depositors all demand their money back at once, they face bankruptcy. So they
must be careful and cut back on their lending or go bust like Bear Stearns. So
they must deleverage.

Banks and other financial institutions are now deleveraging
like mad. They won't lend to home owners or manufacturers, or they will lend
less and at higher interest rates. Fictitious capital is disappearing and the
poor state of real capital is being revealed beneath a welter of worthless
paper.

This spells economic slump. As I have argued in this column
many times, capitalist profitability goes up and down in cycles according to
Marx's law of the tendency of the rate of profit to decline. This is a
tendency: profitability does not always decline. Indeed, in the US, the UK
and Europe, it rose from 1982 to 1997. But now
we are in the middle of the down phase in profitability that is likely to last
until 2013-15.

In the down phase, falling profitability can sometimes lead
to an actual fall in the mass of profits generated by capitalism producing a
bout of economic recession where production slows, unemployment rises and
investment falls until profitability is restored.

This process is now happening. US corporate profits are now
falling and soon European corporate profits will too. Then investment will slow
or stop and unemployment, which has been falling in the US and Europe
since 2002, will start to rise - and fast.

The last economic recession was in 2001 and it was very mild
because, although profits fell, the huge boost of fictitious capital into the
housing market kept up consumer spending. Now we are entering an economic
recession when housing markets everywhere are heading downwards and credit has
dried up. This is going to be the worst economic downturn for capitalism since
1991 or 1981, maybe as bad as 1974-5.